Nimoy recalls an incident in 1924 where a group of miners were allegedly attacked by Bigfoot. The area is called Ape Canyon. Nimoy says for Indians, Canadians or Anthropologists they believe that Bigfoot exists.
The Bigfoot incidents stretch from California to Columbia. An anthropologist, Dr. Kranz, talks about the Sasquatch (another name for Bigfoot) and describes Bigfoot as the missing link between man and ape. The famous Roger Patterson from 1967 which allegedly showed a huge ape man like man is shown. The anthropologist says he believes it’s authentic because there’s no way to duplicate the movements of the creature.
Nimoy says Bigfoot reports go as far back as 1811. In 1892, he says railroad workers captured a creature called Jacko which might have been a Bigfoot creature.
Nimoy does explain that half of these reports are fakes and hoaxes.
Another man, Louis Allway is interviewed claiming to have seen a Bigfoot. Another witness, James Strayham claims to have seen a Bigfoot in Oregon. Nimoy talks a Bigfoot Investigation Research Project led by Peter Bern who conduct searches for Bigfoot and to
verify the claims of alleged eyewitness to Bigfoot.
Bern describes the process and Nimoy says one credible sighting occurred in 1970 with two loggers. However, it just turns out be another sighting with no evidence.
The episode focus then turns to the attention of capturing or killing a Bigfoot. Nimoy points out several areas that have passed laws barring the killing of Bigfoot.
The skeptics say that as long as no body will be ever captured then all claims for Bigfoot will passed of as hoaxes. Even Dr. Kranz, the man interviewed earlier about the Patterson film says that the capture of Bigfoot would provide the most conclusive evidence once and for all that it exists.
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